Oh man. Not to derail the thread too too much, but play the Arkham games. Especially if you're a Batman fan. Even if you aren't they're amazingly good games. I paid full price for both soon after release, which is something I don't often do, and I don't regret it a bit.

In fact on that note I think that's going to be my next DkS distraction.

I watched this movie last night called Eden Lake. Which I know is a little odd considering my recommendation of Lake Mungo. Anyway if you're into realistic gore check out this movie. It turned my stomach several times. It also presents itself with such sheer realism and brutality that it comes off as being extremely disturbing. One of those movies that made me feel a little sick for being part of the human race.

The only thing I can really equate it to is the r-a-p-e scene in Last House on the Left. Just realistic brutality from start to finish.

I feel like a pretty important statement about that film is that it wasn't the human violence that bothered me, but the violence inflicted on animals. It's all real, and I find the fact that a film maker would do something like that to an animal for theatrical shock content or to make money or for whatever reason they used to justify it, is despicable.

Yeah. That was the biggest shock for me too. I saw a documentary awhile ago called something like "Eating with Cannibaks" about a guy who went and tracked down some, hopefully, former cannibals. What an eye opener. The impression is always of inhuman monsters and he found very pleasant individuals with beliefs that are a tad different than my own

Yeah it seems like most of the indigenous cultures that do it clearly don't do it the way that it's often portrayed. It's like a religious thing, and if I'm not mistaken it's usually done to honor the dead.

So I was browsing Netflix and ended up going with this newish Kevin Costner movie I've never heard of, "The New Daughter," and I just realized that his female co-star is the little girl from Pan's Labyrinth

Really, that girl knocked that movie out of the ballpark. I watched that expecting a fairy tale and was surprised because 1. I got a fairy tale and more importantly, 2. the fairy tale was more like the original Grimm's tales before Disney gave them the cutesy makeover. I want my wicked step sisters to have mangled feet and humiliation at the end of Cinderella!

Right? How scarey was that thing with eyes on its hands? The feast thing?

So far this movie isn't spectacular. Costner is, as usual, flat and unconvincing, but she's amazing once again. It's a horror flick and she's sort of partially the focus. She's doing a wonderful job of being extremely creepy. She's speaking English too

Sadly he probably got paid more than she did. She's one I hope to see more from. Pan's woulda been mildly entertaining at best except she sold it big time. Costner wowed me as Robin Hood when I was too young to know any better. In hindsight, anything prominently featuring both Costner and Christian Slater should never have been made.

Yeah I'll give you Prince of Thieves, and raise you The Untouchables. I don't know that I've enjoyed him other than that though. Maybe Dances with Wolves.

The New Daughter ended up as good as I thought it would be. I gave it 3 stars on my Netflix account because I want it to recommend me more horror movies with budgets, not because I really enjoyed it all that much. But yes, she was better than Costner throughout the entire movie. I'm going to go look up her name so we can stop calling her "she"

It's amazing to me how much good sound design can affect the entire feel of a film. I was just watching Donnie Darko, and the soundtrack just totally sets the feel of the whole movie. Without it, it would be an entirely different film.